PDF files with .PL extension

I use Firefox 30.0 under Windows 8.1

When I download a legal opinion from the 7th Circuit <http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/opinion.html>, it appears with a .PL extension rather than .PDF. When I click on it, it loads into WordPad as unreadable hash.

How do I get it to load as a PDF? Perhaps a different browser?

I know that Perl produces .PL files, but please don't ask me to use Perl.

I know what the Orb looks like, but can't find it. I've looked through the desktop, the Firefox menu and elsewhere. I've called up the Run command, which doesn't recognize "Associate File." What next?

The "Orb" is the modern version of the Start Button. It contains a flag rather than the word "Start".

To associate the file, open up "Computer" (file manager). Find the file. Right click on it, and choose Open With then Choose Default Program. Browse to find the program you want to use (your PDF program), and check "Always use the selected program to open this kind of file". Then click OK.

I think that RG didn't notice you are using 8.1, which doesn't have an Orb. Just open file manager and look for a .pl files. Right click, then hover over 'Open with' and select 'Choose default program'. Click more options, and select a PDF viewer from the list. If, like RG, you use Foxit, you need to go to the bottom of the list and click on 'Look for another app' and navigate to where it (or your favourite PDF reader) is.

Are you sure it's a PDF file? The PL extension is usually used for Perl scripts, which are used frequently on Web servers, although they are usually in directories from which downloading is prohibited by the Web server.

Another possibility is that it is not PDF but PostScript Language (PL), which seems much more likely. If that's the case, you will need something along the lines of GhustScript to read it.